Holding onto ten thousand yuan, is there still a chance to turn things around in the crypto world?
Honestly, yes. But you have to truly understand what you're doing.
The biggest enemy of small funds isn't slow earning, but chaotic operations. Thinking of relying on a market surge for a big turnaround? Basically, you're just giving your money directly to the market. The survival rule for small funds is quite simple: do short-term swings, solve T+0, only take gains you can understand, and don't pin your dreams on some "hundredfold myth."
Trading ultimately is about exchanging risk for reward, but that doesn't mean gambling recklessly. The only ironclad rule is: don't get yourself wiped out first. How much you earn each day isn't that important; what's crucial is whether you can hold through the drawdowns and ensure one impulsive move doesn't wipe out your previous profits.
The market is constantly playing out, and opportunities never run out. As long as your principal is still alive, you're still at the table. Those truly eliminated by the market are never the ones who missed a few waves; it's the ones whose emotions explode and get completely wiped out in a full-margin liquidation.
This market is both fair and brutal. Leverage and 24/7 trading are accelerators for disciplined traders, but for impulsive traders, they become a meat grinder.
I've seen small accounts with steady pace and strong execution steadily grow. I've also seen ample capital but gambling on directions every day, ending up with nothing left.
Small funds are not a sin; reckless behavior is the real sin.
Whether you can survive depends on what? Not how daring you are to charge in, but whether you can stay calm and live longer, walking this trading path step by step. To break free from the cycle of reckless trading and losses, you need to learn steady accumulation—find a rhythm that suits you and use discipline to eat well. #以太坊大户持仓变化 $LIGHT
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MentalWealthHarvester
· 01-11 04:59
Being ruthless is ruthless, but the reality is that most people simply can't hold on. Only when the entire position is wiped out do they realize what it means to regret deeply.
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StableBoi
· 01-10 23:52
That makes sense, but the reality is that most people just can't control their hands. I'm the same, haha.
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BuyHighSellLow
· 01-10 15:42
It's tough, but I just can't help but go all-in.
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ForkPrince
· 01-09 09:15
Well said. The most frightening moment is when you go all-in with a full position, and the drawdown causes a mental breakdown.
View OriginalReply0
GateUser-f8c2c9f7
· 01-09 04:45
Anyone can speak of ruthlessness; only a few live it.
Reply0
GateUser-10ff8c9c
· 01-08 21:41
There is clear selling pressure; the market needs a correction before any new rise.
View OriginalReply0
MetaMuskRat
· 01-08 05:58
There's nothing wrong with what you're saying, but I just want to ask, how many people can really hold the drawdown without getting liquidated?
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FOMOSapien
· 01-08 05:54
That's a great point, but I'm just worried people won't listen. That's how full positions get wiped out.
View OriginalReply0
LiquidatedAgain
· 01-08 05:53
Uh... ten thousand bucks to turn things around? I laughed. I'm the one who got liquidated three times and still wants to try again.
View OriginalReply0
ZenZKPlayer
· 01-08 05:44
That's so true. I'm the kind of person who goes all-in and gets wiped out, then just lies down... Now I understand, staying alive is more important than making money.
Holding onto ten thousand yuan, is there still a chance to turn things around in the crypto world?
Honestly, yes. But you have to truly understand what you're doing.
The biggest enemy of small funds isn't slow earning, but chaotic operations. Thinking of relying on a market surge for a big turnaround? Basically, you're just giving your money directly to the market. The survival rule for small funds is quite simple: do short-term swings, solve T+0, only take gains you can understand, and don't pin your dreams on some "hundredfold myth."
Trading ultimately is about exchanging risk for reward, but that doesn't mean gambling recklessly. The only ironclad rule is: don't get yourself wiped out first. How much you earn each day isn't that important; what's crucial is whether you can hold through the drawdowns and ensure one impulsive move doesn't wipe out your previous profits.
The market is constantly playing out, and opportunities never run out. As long as your principal is still alive, you're still at the table. Those truly eliminated by the market are never the ones who missed a few waves; it's the ones whose emotions explode and get completely wiped out in a full-margin liquidation.
This market is both fair and brutal. Leverage and 24/7 trading are accelerators for disciplined traders, but for impulsive traders, they become a meat grinder.
I've seen small accounts with steady pace and strong execution steadily grow. I've also seen ample capital but gambling on directions every day, ending up with nothing left.
Small funds are not a sin; reckless behavior is the real sin.
Whether you can survive depends on what? Not how daring you are to charge in, but whether you can stay calm and live longer, walking this trading path step by step. To break free from the cycle of reckless trading and losses, you need to learn steady accumulation—find a rhythm that suits you and use discipline to eat well. #以太坊大户持仓变化 $LIGHT